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Person Invites You To Learn ‘How Rare Is Your Body?’ In His Viral Series
Humans have been puzzled by things like the depths of the ocean and outer space. But one equally mysterious object has been standing right in front of you when you look in the mirror. It’s a human body.
And one TikTok creator named Knowledgesaurus has been stripping away the mystery surrounding it in a series of “How Rare Is Your Body?” videos. From explaining what percentage of people have features like cracked tongue, angled palm crease, or an extra rib, to counting how many people have the ability to write with both their right and left hands, or can make a clover out of their tongue.
The informative and fun videos gained Knowledgesaurus immediate popularity with millions of views and 1.3M followers, so let’s see some of the most interesting body facts that will pump your biology knowledge muscle so you can show it off in the next trivia session.
@knowledgesaurus How Rare Are You? ##rare ##howrare ##bodyfacts ##mindblown ##fyp ##foryoupage ##greenscreen
♬ original sound - Knowledgesaurus
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25% of people sneeze when they're exposed to direct sunlight. It's called the photic sneeze reflex.
30% of people can flare their nostrils on command. However that muscle has very little use and is usually weak, so a lot of people can't do it on command.
Only 12% of people have tetrachromacy - the ability to see a lot more colors than the majority of people. They can see about 10 times as many shades and colors as someone with normal vision.
Aight dangit, now I wanna know what colors I'm missing out on...Or am I not missing any at all....hmmmmm.
With 1.4 million followers and 38.5 million likes on TikTok, Knowledgesaurus is the internet’s beloved creator sharing everything interesting—facts, smart observations, and common myths—in lighthearted and fun videos. Bored Panda reached out to Knowledgesaurus to find out more about his personality and how his love for fun facts and dinosaurs won the hearts of the internet.
2% of people naturally have red hair. In order to have a child with this hair color, both parents need to possess the gene, and while redheads make up a tiny part of the population, one study found that 30% of ads have people with red hair in them.
My maternal grandma and grandpa were redheads, my mom and sister are redheads, my husband's dad had read hair, my son is a red head. Out of 23 niblings in both families, my son is the only redhead
Less than 1% of people can hear colors or see sounds (synesthesia).
I see colours when I hear music. Also a strange one, Peoples' names all have different and individual colours too.
Really? A true synesthete? That's fascinating! How do you manage to describe things to others, who do not have the same capacity? Wow.
Load More Replies...My understanding is a bit piecemeal, so take it with a grain of salt, and there could be several ways something like that happens: Thoughts, memories, etc. are (at least in part) neuronal cascades. Like, one nerve fires, triggers a few others and they fire, trigger a few each, and on until it dissipates. Certain substances, and other stimuli, can cause this to happen randomly, and it becomes recognisable because they happen in the same patterns even if started randomly. (Things like certain shapes - basic primitives, facial expressions, postures - are kind of hardwired into a part of the visual processing system, and no doubt certain categories of other sensory information are, also.) And sometimes the substance can cause the cascades to bleed over into other nerve patterns/memory structures. and also the brain has a layer of processing that filters out neuronal noise and distinguishes signals (like when you can distinguish a voice in a noisy room full of voices), but if this is interrupted for some reason then normally differentiated signals can be hard to distinguish and may blend. So, you are receiving a stimulus for, maybe, sound and it is bleeding over into, or perhaps coinciding with a randomly stimulated trigger of a visual representation (colour, shapes), and they're interpreted as being the same signal. One that I've had with psychedelics is tasting textures.
Load More Replies...Ah, I have a mild version of this where I heavily assign colors to names and words. For example, June is violet to me, and I’ve never met another who agrees with me.
I have this (probably from a head injury when I was young). I see sound as shapes and colours. It's automatic. I only notice it if I think about it..it's just how I experience sound so I don't think about it often. It's partly why I love electronic music..it looks beautiful
I picture you being at a rave, looking in extasy! While you're the only one sober.
Load More Replies...I can't even really comprehend what that would be like, amazing, we know eff all about our brains.
No, shitloads is known about the brain these days. There's still loads to know but they're not really that mysterious anymore. And there are ways to experience even things like this. Electrocution can achieve it - people getting electro-shock therapy report it, as well as people who have been struck by lightning or who are maybe a little hasty when it comes to cutting electrical cables with naked blades. Psychedelics can cause these experiences, also. I'd recommend the latter as soon as the former, but you're your own person. Just, inform yourself before you consider taking to an electrical socket with a fork.
Load More Replies...I associate shapes with tastes, and colours and lines with accents or colours and heat with places. For example my born accent British is flat/black and white but American is bright rainbow with soft ups and downs, or Australian is kinda pastel rainbow with occasional rounded spikes if that makes sense. And home is warm red but a new or scary place is cold and harsh white
I'm a synesthete, I don't see colors when I hear music, I just hear them, example C=Red
That’s cool. Do you run out of colors or can you use the same colors for things?
Load More Replies...During exam season I used an energy drink instead of water for my coffee. Passed the exam with flying (and loud) colours.
I don't actually "see" letters, but they each have a different "personality." Same with many words
Synesthesia runs in my family, and I feel cheated that I didn't get it.
Same. I would love to see sound in color. Words and letters have personalities to me , but I don't actually see them
Load More Replies...i have mild synesthesia, every number/word/letter has an assigned color inside my brain, and whenevre i read something i translate it to that color(s) in my heads
They think Mozart had this, and it's why his deafness wasn't a hinderance to his ability to create music, because he saw the music.
I am so incredibly interested in synesthesia and I have been studying it for quite a while
I've met a lot of people who claim this, but I often think this is wishful thinking.
So I don’t know if this would be considered what their talking about, but I have this weird thing where I always know when a tv is on. Like even if it’s on “sleep” mode and I’m in a different room..... I know it’s on. My husband thinks I’m weird 🤣
I like to think that music is color-coded, like you can tell what sort of emotion a song is giving off and link a color to it.
I have synesthesia, I see sounds in various black andcwhite shapes, like tv static. Didnt know it was that rare. Used to be way more annoying but ive learned to live with it
I believe I have this.I can hear colours (for example - a pale blue is trumpet, and a deep purple is some sort of opera, and hot pink id a really shouty ballad)
Reminds me a discussion between me and my partner about how we feel numbers. At the end we agreed that odd numbers are cold a and even numbers feel warm. But we didn't agree about colours of days. My monday is blue, his green. My thursday is green, but his yellow...and so on.When our mutual friend overheard this told us, that we are strange :)
Nope Not true Synesthesia is very broad and includes crossing over of any senses More then 90% of the population can pass the Kiki and Buba test proving they have a form of synesthesia
It is usually something you're born with, but it can be developed later in life through trauma to the head. so, yay..?
Do they all see or hear the same colour or sound? Otherwise it’s just assigning one to another subjectively
no, the colors are different to everyone. I've never met anyone who sees the same color-matches as I do.
Load More Replies...9% of people can taste the soap taste in cilantro. Cilantro contains the chemical that is also a byproduct of soapmaking.
“I’m 25 years old and have been an entrepreneur since the age of 19. I found success with that early on and ended up dropping out of college. I made good money, but wasn’t happy.” At that point, the TikTok creator took a risk and decided to “stop all that and start something more fun that I’m interested in and that’s how Knowledgesaurus started. I started this account 1/1/2021 with the goal of growing it and making it my full-time job and within 110 days, I was able to reach 1 million followers, which I’m so thankful for!”
5% of people have amber eyes - golden or coppery with flakes of gold, green or brown. Amber eyes are very common in dogs, bird and fish.
Less than 1% of people have this small little hole right on their ear. Some evolutionary biologists claim this used to be a gill on humans.
24% of people can raise one eyebrow, however you can learn to do this as well.
When asked how he came up with the idea for the "How Rare Are You?" series, Knowledgesaurus said it started after making a bunch of videos and seeing what people enjoyed watching. “I realized that people love to know information about themselves and love statistics. So that’s how the series began.”
“I always loved knowing random useless information to surprise people with,” the content creator said and added: “I think it all started when I was younger. If someone was talking about something I didn’t know much about, I would go and look up stuff about it and find interesting information about that topic so I could have a better conversation next time.”
10% of people have something called Morton's toe. It's when your big toe is shorter than the one next to it. The Statue of Liberty actually has a Morton's toe as well.
Only 33% of people can whistle. Almost everyone has the ability to whistle, it just takes the right techniques.
Well, if you can't whistle it's because you didn't eat the crusts of your bread. Or so my mother claimed.
Only 1% of people are ambidextrous - they have no preference for the use of right or left hand.
1% of people need less sleep than the rest of us. These people have Sleeper Syndrome which allows them to go through a sleep cycle faster than an average person.
35% of people have no wisdom teeth. Wisdom teeth used to serve a purpose but now they no longer do, which is why we take them out so they don't get infected while they're pushing through your gums. If you don't have wisdom teeth, I'm jealous of you.
35%?? Everyone I know has or had wisdom teeth. Does this occur in certain populations?
83.7% of people can roll their tongue, but only 14.7% of people can make a clover out of their tongue.
4% of people have Raynaud's syndrome. This is when a part of your body, usually your fingers or toes, starts to turn white when exposed to low temperatures. It's your body's overreaction to cold or distress.
I have this! It's incredibly painful & feels like the worst kind of pins & needles imaginable.
Only 10% of people have Darwin's tubercle - the little bump on the outside of your ear. It's believed that people who have this are better at sensing voice tonality.
Less than 1% of people in the US have AB-Negative blood. There's also something called Golden blood, which only about 40 people in the world have, and it's completely different than any other blood.
16% of people can make a roaring noise in their head using their jaw. They're able to do this because they can control a small muscle in their jaw that deafens chewing, but when it is flexed it makes a roaring noise.
I can do this too, but I thought this was something everyone experiences
Less than 1% of people have unbreakable bones. This is caused by a mutation in one of the genes that causes the bones to be up to 8 times denser.
35% of people can gleek. Only 1% of people can do it on command. Gleeking is when you're spitting saliva from under your tongue and it squirts out.
Less than 1% of people are born with a white patch of hair. It is called poliosis, which is caused by the lack of pigment called melanin in the hair follicles.
Two of my maid’s children have this. Brown and white hair. I love their hair.
Only 5% of people have arched fingerprints. Most people have looped and whorled fingerprints.
Less than 1% of people have their heart on the right side of their body. Surprisingly, this doesn't normally come with any negative consequences.
Only 25% of people have dimples. You can have either two, or just one. Dimples are also hereditary, so if either of your parents has a dimple, it's more likely you'll have one as well.
20% of people have a gap between their two front teeth. What normally causes this is a discrepancy between the jaw size and the teeth. A lot of celebrities have this and don't correct it because they think it makes them unique.
Some people believe this is an indication that you will become rich. I have yet to see anyone who has.
Only 2% of people naturally have blonde hair. If you narrow it down just to white people in the United States, that percentage goes up to 5%.
I think it depends on what you classify as blonde. Is it truly white hair or just lighter (like dark blonde)?
Only 10% of people have birthmarks. They're usually oval in shape and come in a coffee type color.
I used to have a big oval birthmark, on my lower back. But it faded as I got older and eventually disappeared altogether.
70% of people bend their head to the right when kissing. Your brain is the cause for this. The left side of our face shows more emotion so we want to give our partner the more emotive side and we tilt our head to the right.
1% of people have a double row of eyelashes. While this might look like something a lot of you are jealous of, it actually can cause a lot of problems.
Less than 1% of people have pointy or elf-like ears. It's an abnormality called Stahl's ear, it's usually corrected early in life.
Why does it need correcting? Isn't it just a cosmetic difference? Shouldn't it be up to the child to keep it or change it once they're old enough to make the decision, as long as it isn't impacting their hearing?
Only 35% of people have 20/20 vision. 2/3 people cannot see perfectly.
25% of people have perfect teeth and never need braces or any orthodontics. 45% of children need braces, but 75% need orthodontic care.
Need or want? My teeth aren't perfect and if I was an actor or something, I would've 'needed' braces, but health-wise I don't. So do they mean 75% will have health problems if they don't get work done, or just that it looks ugly?
14% of people don't have this muscle - Palmaris Longus. This muscle was developed when our ancestors were big tree climbers. If you want to see if you still have it, pull back your palm on a flat surface, touch your pinky and thumb together and slightly lift them and you should see that ligament pop out.
6% of people can vibrate and rapidly shake their eyeballs back and forth.
10% of people can touch their nose with their tongues. In medicine, this is called the Gorlin sign.
20% of people are double jointed. This is thought to be genetic and due to a variation in collagen in your connective tissues.
4% of people are colorblind. Color blindness occurs in 8% of men and 0.5% of women.
Less than 1% of people can give themselves goosebumps on command. The majority of people get them when they're cold or listening to music, but some can give themselves goosebumps whenever they want to.
yup i just have to imgine biting into a popsicle. lol i liteally got goosebumps writing this.
Only 12% of people dream in black and white.
Only 1% of the population can lick their elbow. The people that can do this usually have either a long tongue or a short forearm, or both.
Hmmmm...I wonder...:: unsuccessfully trying to lick my elbow...Wife walks in and witnesses me trying::: Wife- What the ever lovin h3ll are you doing? Me as embarrassment and awkwardness set in:: Ummm... nothing hon...nothin at all...
10% of people are left handed. Left handed people tend to live shorter lives.
8.4% of people have a counterclockwise hair whorl on their head, while the majority has a clockwise one.
8% of people still have chimp-like feet, that are specifically adapted to climbing trees. This is characterized by a mid-foot arch. If you want to check if you have this, see if you can bend the ball of your foot as well as the region half-way between your heel and the ball of your foot.
I had a hard time understanding this, because that picture is not showing the mentioned bend at all. This is what it looks like: https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRv7izzuQZ8x4BdXJ5PzLGWd-Ogt4KLZ4xgMQ&usqp=CAU
Only 4% of people have an outie belly button. Believe it or not, doctors can't choose if you'll have an innie or an outie belly button, things like the belly button itself and the fat beneath it determine what it will look like.
Less than 1% of people have an extra rib. Most people are born with 24, but some have 25 ribs. The 25th is called a cervical rib.
25% of people have a Hitchhiker's thumb - when the upper part of the thumb can bend 90 degrees backwards. It's caused by a certain gene.
About 20% of people have a pupil that is bigger than the other. This is called anisocoria, it can be a very small, or a very big difference.
Note: this post originally had 60 images. It’s been shortened to the top 50 images based on user votes.
Fascinating post. Luckily I read it early in the morning so no one saw me trying to lick my elbow, wiggle my ears, flare my nostrils, etc.
Something else that is also rare: having both red hair and blue eyes, and it’s actually the rarest combo on earth. This is because red hair and blue eyes alone are both rare, and both parents have to carry the gene for the child to have red hair and blue eyes. I actually have red hair and blue eyes. Both my sisters have red-ish hair, but their eyes are not blue and their hair isn’t nearly as red as mine.
I have grey eyes and reddish hair. I hardly see anyone else with grey eyes.
Load More Replies...This was fun and I had quite a few of these. Going to celebrate my weirdness!
This was so cool! Today I learned that I have twelve of these, including a few that only one percent have.
I found out recently that my blue/gold center heterochromia (blue eyes with a gold ring) is exceedingly rare. My family and I always called my eye colour “Blue Hazel.”
Does anyone know anything about sharper canine teeth? Mine are much pointier than anyone in my family.
I don't know if it means anything. My dad had them too. When he was little my nephew wondered if I was a vampire. Never thought, I could have dressed up as a vampire on Halloween and not needed the fake teeth.
Load More Replies...I have at least 16 of these, I wonder if some are likely to be associated with each other? Morton's toe, hyper flexible, extra rib, dimples, eye brows, seeing extra colours, ear wiggling, touch tongue to nose, nostril flare, preauricular sinus, whistle, gap tooth, never needed braces, gleeking, goosebumps and snoring. I only had 3 wisdom teeth, which is quite rare as well, and a form of Synaesthesia where I experience pain as smells.
So, who else scored themselves? 11 out of 50 weird things. unfortunately, mostly useless ones. lucky in some areas like colour acuity and 20/20 vision[failing with age though].
As a people of 1, I was included in 0% of the questions, some of which I would not have answered
I have an extra muscle in my elbow called anconeus epitrochlearis. It causes pressure on my ulnar nerve sending some of my fingers numb sometimes and cause me to have a weak grip and I only have it on my left elbow.
10% of the population has 6 lumbar vertebrae. I am one if them and only found out when I needed a spinal fusion.
My stupid human trick is I can move my uvula at will and make a sound :)
My genetics prof was discussing different inherited traits. He mentioned that lobed or unlobed ears was one of them. I sat perfectly still with my one lobed ear and one ear not, trying not to be noticed.
If your not one of those from any country ( my fault but whales matter!!!) I hope we can rise and leave the ocean alone alittle. Just alittle.
Don't care if I'm the bitch. How on earth could I be that???? Yes yum, no whale obviously.
Load More Replies...I'm so so over it. If I get cancer n shark fin could cure me! I will say no. Unlike U many shark fin soup dickheads. My grandfather survived old n no treatment. Not racist again but f**k you whale killers n Asians who would probably eat humans.
Please stop hurting whales, sharks n dolphins. I can't handle not being able to stop you.
I'm done. You next generation are too much!! Why can I not say one single thing without it being blown out of proportion??? If a Asian asked me why am I being mean against whales being murdered, I will say " "And how's your sushi bitch'. Or yes you don't understand me & I don't understand you. No worries.🙂🙂🙂
I don't judge, but your making it f*****g harder that it should be!!!!
Load More Replies...Does the chimp feet thing count for picking stuff up with your toes, or is that something most people do on a daily basis? I do it often myself when I see something on the floor but don't to bend over.
I used to be able to peel a banana with my toes. A broken foot put an end to that charming party trick..
Load More Replies...Me: can't do/don't have 90% of these, but can make a roaring noise with my jaw. Also me: I can make roaring noise I'm SpEcIaL
Wow I'm even more of an odd-duck than I thought. I can do/have a lot of these. And some not on the list, like central heterochromia, around my pupil is an amber(ish) brown, and around that is green.
Went back and counted off on my fingers, 11. And might even be 12,can't see my fingers in the darkness of my room.
Load More Replies...I have or can do like 13 of these. No wonder my mom thinks I’m special 😜
I can wiggle my ears on command, and so can my Dad. I've never met anyone else that could. I'm curious what % of the population can do that... I also have red hair, blue eyes, and a bunch of the other "rare" traits listed here, so let's just go ahead and call me a freak of nature lmao
Cool! Like an activity to find out if you're special! And have hidden talents
What fun! I'm blonde (but boring old green eyes), can flare my nose, taste the soap in cilantro, have arch fingerprints, raise both eyebrows individually, have shorter big toe, sunlight makes me sneeze, have Reynaud's, only need 4 hours sleep, have hitchhiker's thumb (though never used it!), have Darwin's tubercle, can wiggle both ears, have palmaris longus, and perfect pitch.
Green eyes are incredibly rare, believe it or nto. Only 2% of the entire worlds population has green eyes, and iirc, they are the rarest eye colour aside from "mutations" that may cause different eye colours like a reddish or violet eye (albinism for example) (I also use the term mutation lightly, as funnily enough, the genes that cause a person to have green eyes initially was a mutation, same as with blue eyes, and this can be tracked down to certain specific ancestors, meaning people with green or blue eyes may be very, very, very, veryx10000 distantly related to each other xP) That means that freaking amber eyes are actually more common than green eyes. o.o So not, "boring old green eyes"!
Load More Replies...Fascinating post. Luckily I read it early in the morning so no one saw me trying to lick my elbow, wiggle my ears, flare my nostrils, etc.
Something else that is also rare: having both red hair and blue eyes, and it’s actually the rarest combo on earth. This is because red hair and blue eyes alone are both rare, and both parents have to carry the gene for the child to have red hair and blue eyes. I actually have red hair and blue eyes. Both my sisters have red-ish hair, but their eyes are not blue and their hair isn’t nearly as red as mine.
I have grey eyes and reddish hair. I hardly see anyone else with grey eyes.
Load More Replies...This was fun and I had quite a few of these. Going to celebrate my weirdness!
This was so cool! Today I learned that I have twelve of these, including a few that only one percent have.
I found out recently that my blue/gold center heterochromia (blue eyes with a gold ring) is exceedingly rare. My family and I always called my eye colour “Blue Hazel.”
Does anyone know anything about sharper canine teeth? Mine are much pointier than anyone in my family.
I don't know if it means anything. My dad had them too. When he was little my nephew wondered if I was a vampire. Never thought, I could have dressed up as a vampire on Halloween and not needed the fake teeth.
Load More Replies...I have at least 16 of these, I wonder if some are likely to be associated with each other? Morton's toe, hyper flexible, extra rib, dimples, eye brows, seeing extra colours, ear wiggling, touch tongue to nose, nostril flare, preauricular sinus, whistle, gap tooth, never needed braces, gleeking, goosebumps and snoring. I only had 3 wisdom teeth, which is quite rare as well, and a form of Synaesthesia where I experience pain as smells.
So, who else scored themselves? 11 out of 50 weird things. unfortunately, mostly useless ones. lucky in some areas like colour acuity and 20/20 vision[failing with age though].
As a people of 1, I was included in 0% of the questions, some of which I would not have answered
I have an extra muscle in my elbow called anconeus epitrochlearis. It causes pressure on my ulnar nerve sending some of my fingers numb sometimes and cause me to have a weak grip and I only have it on my left elbow.
10% of the population has 6 lumbar vertebrae. I am one if them and only found out when I needed a spinal fusion.
My stupid human trick is I can move my uvula at will and make a sound :)
My genetics prof was discussing different inherited traits. He mentioned that lobed or unlobed ears was one of them. I sat perfectly still with my one lobed ear and one ear not, trying not to be noticed.
If your not one of those from any country ( my fault but whales matter!!!) I hope we can rise and leave the ocean alone alittle. Just alittle.
Don't care if I'm the bitch. How on earth could I be that???? Yes yum, no whale obviously.
Load More Replies...I'm so so over it. If I get cancer n shark fin could cure me! I will say no. Unlike U many shark fin soup dickheads. My grandfather survived old n no treatment. Not racist again but f**k you whale killers n Asians who would probably eat humans.
Please stop hurting whales, sharks n dolphins. I can't handle not being able to stop you.
I'm done. You next generation are too much!! Why can I not say one single thing without it being blown out of proportion??? If a Asian asked me why am I being mean against whales being murdered, I will say " "And how's your sushi bitch'. Or yes you don't understand me & I don't understand you. No worries.🙂🙂🙂
I don't judge, but your making it f*****g harder that it should be!!!!
Load More Replies...Does the chimp feet thing count for picking stuff up with your toes, or is that something most people do on a daily basis? I do it often myself when I see something on the floor but don't to bend over.
I used to be able to peel a banana with my toes. A broken foot put an end to that charming party trick..
Load More Replies...Me: can't do/don't have 90% of these, but can make a roaring noise with my jaw. Also me: I can make roaring noise I'm SpEcIaL
Wow I'm even more of an odd-duck than I thought. I can do/have a lot of these. And some not on the list, like central heterochromia, around my pupil is an amber(ish) brown, and around that is green.
Went back and counted off on my fingers, 11. And might even be 12,can't see my fingers in the darkness of my room.
Load More Replies...I have or can do like 13 of these. No wonder my mom thinks I’m special 😜
I can wiggle my ears on command, and so can my Dad. I've never met anyone else that could. I'm curious what % of the population can do that... I also have red hair, blue eyes, and a bunch of the other "rare" traits listed here, so let's just go ahead and call me a freak of nature lmao
Cool! Like an activity to find out if you're special! And have hidden talents
What fun! I'm blonde (but boring old green eyes), can flare my nose, taste the soap in cilantro, have arch fingerprints, raise both eyebrows individually, have shorter big toe, sunlight makes me sneeze, have Reynaud's, only need 4 hours sleep, have hitchhiker's thumb (though never used it!), have Darwin's tubercle, can wiggle both ears, have palmaris longus, and perfect pitch.
Green eyes are incredibly rare, believe it or nto. Only 2% of the entire worlds population has green eyes, and iirc, they are the rarest eye colour aside from "mutations" that may cause different eye colours like a reddish or violet eye (albinism for example) (I also use the term mutation lightly, as funnily enough, the genes that cause a person to have green eyes initially was a mutation, same as with blue eyes, and this can be tracked down to certain specific ancestors, meaning people with green or blue eyes may be very, very, very, veryx10000 distantly related to each other xP) That means that freaking amber eyes are actually more common than green eyes. o.o So not, "boring old green eyes"!
Load More Replies...